1. Introduction (by Hombert, Jean-Marie); 2. Language and archaeology; 3. From the origin of language to the diversification of languages: What can archaeology and palaeoanthropology say? (by d'Errico, Francesco); 4. Early diffusion of domestic bovids in Europe: An indicator for human contacts, exchanges and migrations? (by Tresset, Anne); 5. Language and genes; 6. Linguistic, cultural and genetic perspectives on human diversity in west-central Africa (by Veen, Lolke van der); 7. The Berber and the Berbers: Genetic and linguistic diversities (by Dugoujon, Jean-Michel); 8. East meets West: The Assam corridor (by Jacquesson, Francois); 9. Genetic and linguistic diversity in Central Asia (by Heyer, Evelyne); 10. Genetic and linguistic borders in the Himalayan Region (by Kraaijenbrink, Thirsa); 11. Language acquisition and language universals; 12. From babbling to first words in four languages: Common trends across languages and individual differences (by Kern, Sophie); 13. Language and animal communication; 14. The primate roots of human language: Primate vocal behaviour and cognition in the wild (by Zuberbuhler, Klaus); 15. Language evolution and computer modeling; 16. Can agent-based language evolution contribute to archeology? (by Steels, Luc); 17. Index
This is an extremely sophisticated example of cooperative research.
With such an interdisciplinary approach to language origins and
diffusion, the field is bound to make progress understanding these
and related issues. The scale of comparisons and syntheses, alone,
are bound to result in new ways of thinking about language among
Neandertals, and even earlier species, and modern humans.
*Lewis Binford, Emeritus University Professor, University of New
Mexico*
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